smartphone menu rubriken

The steep road to national unity

Although the event was not the main focus of international attention, the agreement signed by Libya′s rival factions in the Moroccan coastal city of Skhirat this week is perhaps more important for Europe than the European summit meeting that took place the same day. By Karim El-Gawhary

Amidst all the turbulence between rival groups in the North African country, it has been IS that has consolidated its influence over the past few months, especially in Gaddafi′s native city of Sirte. It has even been rumoured that the IS leadership could move to Libya if the military situation in its Syrian headquarters in Raqqa becomes unsustainable. In addition, Libya remains a significant and completely uncontrolled departure point for refugees to Europe.

With this in mind, the efforts of German negotiator Martin Kobler, who served here as UN envoy to the talks and was crucially involved in the Libyan agreement, cannot be seen as totally disinterested from the European point of view.

Just a split second for dialogue?

Essentially, what the country′s two competing power centres signed last Thursday entails the creation of a nine-member presidential council, which will represent the various regions of the country and form a government. The parliament in the east of the country will have legislative authority and a state council will form a second, consultative chamber. In one month, the new unity government should be established and its legitimacy will be confirmed by UN resolution.

That, at least, is the plan. If it works, then Libya will soon once again have a single government that can then administer the country′s oil revenues. It would also serve as an international point of contact. The government would be authorised to set up a national army that could take action against IS and even apply for foreign military assistance in this struggle.

Growing resistance to the UN peace plan: Akila Saleh, one of the leading Libyan politicians and president of the internationally recognised parliament in the East Libyan town of Tobruk, refused to acknowledge the document, claiming the treaty was unconstitutional and a violation of ″national dignity"

All this, however, is still far off. At the very best, the new agreement will foster momentum for dialogue, through which a real consensus could be formed in Libya. In the worst case scenario, these efforts could backfire and instead of only two main centres of power in the country, there would then be three.

Peacemeal peace treaty

The deal was signed by the deputy speakers of each of the rival parliaments. The deputies of both chambers were not part of the agreement and they are still attempting to cobble together their own settlement without, as they claim, any international meddling. For this reason, the UN sponsored deal has not been approved by either of the two parliaments. Only individual parliamentarians have signed the document. In reality, the agreement is still a massive work in progress, a patchwork deal, a list of signatories that, at best, will only grow in the coming weeks.

The main problem is that no one really knows exactly who in Libya represents whom. The most simplistic reading of the situation is that until now two governments have claimed the right to represent the country. One is based in the capital Tripoli and is seen as Islamist, while the other, internationally recognised government, is in the city of Tobruk in the east of the country. Both are supported by local alliances and militias, more out of tactical than ideological grounds. And now, the IS has entrenched itself on the frontlines between these two rivals and is expanding to fill the power vacuum.

Free for all

As previously mentioned, this is the simple version of events. The reality is far too complicated to describe in just a few sentences. The North African country is a chaotic web of local centres of power, groups and militias, which even undermine some tribes. For a long time now, state institutions have only existed on paper. Every one of these numerous centres of power is pursuing its own agenda and forms tactical alliances with larger groups as the situation demands.

"There is a minority on all sides that wants to torpedo the peace agreement and the peace process as a whole,” said Germany′s foreign minister, Walter Steinmeier, after the signing ceremony. The security situation in the capital Tripoli remains fragile. And that′s putting it mildly.

Internecine struggles

Libya is today the scene of political chaos that is difficult to fathom from the outside. Two governments, one in the west and one in the east, are fighting for supremacy. And ...More

In submitting this comment, the reader accepts the following terms and conditions: Qantara.de reserves the right to edit or delete comments or not to publish them. This applies in particular to defamatory, racist, personal, or irrelevant comments or comments written in dialects or languages other than English. Comments submitted by readers using fantasy names or intentionally false names will not be published. Qantara.de will not provide information on the telephone. Readers' comments can be found by Google and other search engines.

Most Recent Photo Essay

Countless cultural assets have been destroyed by the Syrian Civil War. The Syrian Heritage Archive Project in Berlin contributes to preserving their memory with an exhibition showing what has been lost — and what remains. By Christina Kufner